Gottfrid Svartholm, Pirate Bay’s founder, is at risk of being extradited to Denmark for hacking allegations, which only adds to the mountain of worries as his court proceeding in Sweden hasn’t exactly gone in his favor.

After a short man hunt, Gottfrid was brought back to Sweden after he was found and then detained in Cambodia. Following a nearly month long trial, Gottfrid was accused of hacking Logica (among other charges), a Swedish IT company that works with local tax authorities. In his defense, however, he said that he did not hack into Logica, and that whatever evidence authorities found on his computer must have been placed there during his extended stay in Asia.

The prosecutor, Henrik Olin, is arguing that Gottfrid’s denial of the allegations is “not credible”, and that the court should proceed by sentencing Gottfrid for his crimes.

Gottfrid’s woes continue as the Danish police have also put in a request for his extradition to Denmark, on the grounds that they reasons to believe he hacked into CSC, another IT company that works for the Government.

The light is only getting dimmer for Gottfrid as even his mother, Kristina Svartholm, has voiced her concerns about her son’s inability to gather resources to prepare for his defense. She feels that, whereas the government has a mountain of evidence, her son on the other hand isn’t even allowed to speak directly with anyone else besides his lawyer and mother.

“Gottfrid could only contact people indirectly through me or his lawyer. Since I was denied to bring paper and pencil into custody to make notes while visiting him, I often felt rather helpless during this process,” she said, in an interview with TorrentFreak.

Moreover, she also believes that neither the judge nor jury involved have the ‘technical skills’ necessary to fully comprehend Gottfrid’s predicament. The evidences which were used against Gottfrid, she feels, don’t hold any substance if the people sentencing her son don’t possess the skills necessary to dissect and understand them.

“I can’t memorize all technicalities and his lawyer lacks these technical skills as well. Gottfrid had no opportunities whatsoever to discuss the technical matters with anyone else,” she said. “You can’t expect any lawyer to have these skills either.”

The Swedish court will deliver its verdict next week, and Gottfrid’s Demark extradition is still pending while he is held in solitary confinement.